Rooted in the language of traditional farm architecture, Timbertop is a contemporary retreat conceived as a weekend home for an active family of five. Perched on a hilltop clearing, the residence offers sweeping views of southwestern Ontario’s Niagara Escarpment and its iconic terrain of undulating farmland and forested ridges. The 200-acre property is almost entirely woodland and home to deer, porcupines, and wild turkeys. Privately owned and carefully managed, the land is crisscrossed only by footpaths and UTV trails that wind through dense pines and mature maple groves.
The home’s gabled form draws on the region’s agrarian typologies, including single-storey barns and modest farmhouses, now reinterpreted through a modern lens. The roofline skews slightly off-axis, a subtle shift that both reanimates a familiar pitched silhouette and sensitively aligns the structure with the site’s uneven terrain. The gesture also opens the home to its most compelling vista overlooking the forest that descends along a nearby slope. Along this southern-facing edge, a series of glass walls open onto a railing-free deck, allowing for an unmediated connection between the interior and the landscape. The deck wraps around to cradle a cedar-clad hot tub on a raised platform.
Rather than employing a cantilever, the home maintains a continuous roofline under which voids are carved to create a sheltered entry and a screened-in dining and lounge room off the kitchen. Elsewhere, full-height windows are deeply recessed within 26-inch-deep architectural frames, providing passive shading and visual privacy without interrupting the flow of natural light.
Designed for active use in every season, the interior prioritizes functionality and ease. Its single-storey ensures it is adaptable to the daily patterns of a busy family life as well as to the serenity of a quieter lifestyle. A spacious mudroom with laundry facilities is situated directly off the main entry, providing ample space for storing sports gear and wet boots without much fuss. From there, circulation leads into the communal area, featuring a dramatic vaulted ceiling that frames an open kitchen and harvest table at one end and a generous living area with a built-in wall library at the other.
Private spaces are organized along a wide corridor, where three children’s bedrooms share a central bathroom, while the primary suite and ensuite sit at the end of the hall. For added privacy, a handle-free pivoting door that reaches to the ceiling can be closed to completely hide the main bedroom from the rest of the house.
Modernity breathes new life into tradition throughout. White board-and-batten cladding and white oak floor planks reference rural vernaculars, interpreted through a minimalist sensibility, and with high-efficiency radiant heating beneath the floors adding a technical engineering update on tactile warmth. The woodburning stove is deliberately understated, tucked into a corner in the spirit of the utilitarian hearths found in older farmhouses. A television screen—essential for a young family—is a main feature in the living area, though, being recessed into the wall, it is reduced to a quieter geometric presence amid the pale material palette.
A layering of subtle details brings sensory richness to the home and a warmth that is often felt as much as seen. The kitchen table embodies the architectural extension of the house itself, drawing from a barn-like language of sturdy permanence. Its solid wood top is composed of uninterrupted planks that emphasize grain and texture, while the heavy legs echo the massing of the kitchen island and the structural simplicity of the house as a whole. Its natural tone blends with the floors and custom kitchen cabinetry, creating a seamless continuity. Visual interest is introduced not through contrast, but through material orientation. For instance, the way vertical and horizontal grains interact quietly animates the surfaces. That same logic carries throughout the interior. In the bedroom corridor, the floorboards shift direction to run east-west, subtly guiding movement and distinguishing private zones from the open communal core.
Together, these choices compose a home that is both grounded and elevated; a thoughtful synthesis of past and present, where restrained design fosters an emotional connection to place and celebrates the joys of life’s daily rituals.